True to its name, Free Speech Coalition, a trade association representing the adult entertainment industry, condemned Arizona’s age-verification bill, HB-2112, whose aim is to prevent minors from accessing porn websites (see 2501170053). Governor Katie Hobbs (D) signed the age-verification legislation Tuesday.
Public support continued for a Texas bill that would remove private schools from the Securing Children Online through Parental Empowerment (SCOPE) Act. During a hearing Wednesday of the House Trade, Workforce & Economic Development Committee, Rep. Jared Patterson (R) called SB-1860 a “cleanup bill,” since private schools were never intended to be included in the definition of “digital provider.” Public and charter schools were excluded in the original SCOPE, Patterson said.
Connecticut Attorney General William Tong (D) hailed a "strong bipartisan vote" in the state legislature on a social media age-verification bill. The House voted 121-26 Wednesday in favor of HB-6857, sending it to the Senate.
Rhode Island lawmakers should add a private right of action to their comprehensive AI legislation, the American Civil Liberties Union told that state's Senate Artificial Intelligence Committee at a hearing Monday.
A New York state reproductive health privacy bill will reach the Senate floor. Despite Republican opposition, the Senate Health Committee cleared S-1633 at a livestreamed hearing Tuesday.
A Louisiana app store age-verification bill passed the House unanimously on Monday. Members voted 99-0 to send HB-570 to the Senate. The House Commerce Committee last week cleared the bill, which would require age verification by app stores before users can download apps (see 2505050064). Also Monday, the Louisiana House approved a genomic privacy measure (see 2505120064).
Bills about surveillance pricing and kids on social media passed the California Assembly on Monday and will go to the Senate.
The Louisiana House voted 79-14 Monday in favor of a bill (HB-125) aimed at protecting an individual's genomic information from certain foreign entities, including China.
Montana’s comprehensive privacy law will apply to more businesses and add regulations for children’s data, effective Oct. 1. Gov. Greg Gianforte (R) last week signed a bill (SB-297) amending the Montana Consumer Data Privacy Act to make those and other changes.
A government privacy bill in New Hampshire is dead. The legislature updated the status of HB-522 Thursday to “BILL KILLED” after the Senate Judiciary Committee placed the legislation on the execution stand a week prior. A proposed supplement to New Hampshire’s comprehensive privacy law also recently died (see 2505020036).